From a talent standpoint, I don't think the Nuggets would have traded Anthony straight up for Wade. Just like I don't think the Rockets ever would have traded Olajuwon straight up for Jordan. But if I accept your hypothetical, then yes, I imagine the Nuggets' owner would have been quite upset with his GM if he thought he had left value on the table by not taking the guy he considered to be the better player.BossHoggin wrote:mup wrote:That depends. Is there any single player taken in the draft after Waiters for whom you would trade him straight up right now? If the answer is yes (and for me, it is), that means it's a miss.Niko23 wrote:So Waiters was a miss?
It doesn't mean he's a bad player. It just means we didn't maximize the pick and that's not good for a gm.
So Denver missed in 2003 because they would have traded Melo for Wade? Missing is taking Thabeet.
That's the definition of a "miss"--- there is something wrong with the team's evaluation process that it is not identifying the best prospect for the team. If such a flaw exists, you don't just accept it and say "well, it could have been worse," you fix it, no? You either fix it internally or externally, but you don't just leave it alone.
Your Anthony/Wade hypo, if I accept it, represents at best a narrow miss, one that might not cost a guy his job if the owner believes it was close enough and the team can nonetheless have success with the lesser player. But if the owner really believed that the team would have been a better team had they drafted Wade instead, then yes, there would have been hell to pay.
The Thabeet pick represents a more egregious miss; the kind that should cause some severe retooling in your scouting department. But both are misses--- you simply cannot consistently leave value on the table.